The researchers studied a specific mutation in a brain protein called tau that causes the protein to become misfolded and alter its normal function. In general, when tau proteins become misfolded, they build up inside neurons and contribute to various forms of dementia, including Alzheimer’s dementia and frontotemporal dementia, a neurodegenerative disease similar to Alzheimer’s that often strikes earlier — in middle age — and typically involves significant changes in personality and behavior that precede cognitive decline.
In this new study, the researchers studied neurons that had been reprogrammed from skin cells sampled from patients with frontotemporal dementia who carried the tau mutation. In the neurons, the mutated tau proteins caused waste-recycling centers called lysosomes, which are involved in autophagy, to become dysfunctional, allowing cellular waste to accumulate in the lysosomes, which may contribute to neuronal death. The researchers found that enhancing autophagy with an analog of the chemical compound G2 improved clearance of the garbage, reduced tau levels in the lysosomes and prevented cellular toxicity and death.
G2 was discovered in 2019 via screening experiments seeking drugs that could reduce the accumulation of an aggregation-prone protein in a C. elegans model of alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency, which can cause severe liver disease. The compound was later shown to boost autophagy function in mammalian cell model systems.
The researchers also have shown that G2 can protect brain cells from death in cells modeling Huntington’s disease, a fatal inherited neurodegenerative disease caused by a genetic mutation present at birth. In the cellular model of Huntington’s disease, the compound prevented the buildup of a harmful RNA molecule. ScienceMission sciencenewshighlights.
New research adds to growing evidence that helping brain cells break down and eliminate their own cellular waste is a promising treatment strategy for a variety of neurodegenerative diseases. In lab experiments, the researchers found that exposure to a novel compound can clear a harmful protein from human neurons modeling frontotemporal dementia — a devastating and ultimately fatal condition — and prevent those neurons from dying.
The study is published in the journal Nature Communications.